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This Week In Black History May 7-14, 2025

Portrait of a black filmmaker on the street.

 

1800—On this date the founder of the settlement which would grow to be­come the city of Chicago, Jean Baptiste Pointe Du Sable, sold his property and left the settlement. The Haitian-born frontier trader and businessman had a history of building significant wealth, losing it and building it again. He would die 18 years later in St. Charles, Mo.

 

1878—Black inventor, Joseph R. Win­ters, receives a patent for his designing of the fire escape ladder.

2010—A report on felony disenfran­chisement laws begins to receive widespread publicity. The report was actually released on April 21 by the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund. It showed that 5.3 million Amer­icans were being denied the right to vote because of past felony convictions. Disproportionately, those denied voting rights were African American. In fact, the report revealed that 13 percent of Black males could not vote because of felo­ny convictions. Historically, most voting disenfranchisement laws were enacted after the Civil War as a means to keep newly freed Blacks from voting.

1858—The first play by an Afri­can-American writer is published. The play was titled “The Escape” and the au­thor was William Wells Brown.

1925—The Brotherhood of Sleep­ing Car Porters was founded. It would become the leading Black-led trade union organization in America. In addi­tion to introducing unionism to African Americans, the ability to travel to cities throughout the country enabled the porters to become a major vehicle of communications for American Blacks. They distributed everything from letters to Black-oriented newspapers as they traveled the nation. The chief organizer was the legendary A. Phillip Randolph.

1952—Boxer-turned-actor Canada Lee dies in New York City at the age of 45. Second only to the legendary Paul Robeson, Lee was the leading serious (non-comedic) Black actor of the 1940s.

He gave impressive performances in Alfred Hitchcock’s thriller “Lifeboat” (1944), the boxing classic “Body and Soul” (1947) and “Cry, The Beloved Country” (1951). However, like Robeson, Lee’s film career came to an end during the McCarthy Era when a host of Black and White stars, who were also social activists, were labeled communists and denied jobs.

1837—P.B.S. Pinchback was born in Macon, Ga., to a White plantation own­er and a free Black woman. He became one of the leading Black politicians of the Reconstruction era, especially in Louisiana. After the Civil War, he be­came lieutenant governor of Louisiana and actually served as governor for 43 days. He was later elected to both the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate. He would also play a signif­icant role in the establishment of South­ern University and a major Black news­paper known as the Louisianan.

1994—After being released from 27 years of imprisonment for his battles against the racist system of apartheid, Nelson Mandela is elected the first Black president of South Africa. His government focused on dismantling the legacy of apartheid through tackling institutionalized racism and fostering ra­cial reconciliation. Politically an African nationalist and democratic socialist, he served as president of the African Na­tional Congress (ANC) party from 1991- 97.

Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan speaks to Detroit City Council on Friday, May 17, 2013 in Detroit. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

 

1933—Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan is born Eugene Walcott on this day in the Bronx, N.Y. He was raised by his St. Kitts-born mother in Roxbury, Mass. Prior to joining the Nation of Islam in 1955, Walcott had achieved celebrity status in the Boston area as a Calypso singer, dancer and violinist known as “The Charmer.”

1968—Nine caravans of protesters ar­rived in Washington, D.C., for the first phase of the Poor Peoples Campaign— an anti-poverty effort conceived by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The campaign aimed to united Black, White and His­panic poor people in an effort to pres­sure the government to do more to elim­inate poverty in America. King had been assassinated the previous April, so the campaign was led by his lieutenant, Rev. Ralph Abernathy. The campaign erected Resurrection City near the Lincoln Mon­ument and held daily demonstrations in Washington from May 14 to June 24.

1862—In a bold and heroic endeavor, Robert Smalls led 12 other slaves and stole a Confederate warship, then turn­ing it over to Union forces. The White captain of the steamer Planter and oth­er officers had gone ashore for a party in Charleston, S.C. Smalls, a wheelman, quickly organized the Black crew and steered the ship out of Charleston har­bor right past the unsuspecting Confed­erate forces. For his daring deed, Smalls was commissioned a 2nd lieutenant. After the Civil War, he was elected con­gressman from South Carolina.

1940—Jazz singer Al Jarreau was born on this day in Milwaukee, Wisc.

1865—The last battle of the Civil war ends. Ironically, it appears the Confed­erate troops won the battle at Palmetto Ranch, Texas. However, it was the ac­tions and bravery of the 62nd Regiment of United States Colored Troops that prevented the defeat from turning into a rout. The Confederates had actually underestimated the fighting prowess of the Blacks, assuming they would run in fear when the fighting began. Instead, what occurred was the rapid defeat of two White regiments but the Black sol­diers of the 62nd held firm. The Confed­erates would later surrender.

1950—Singer-songwriter Stevie Won­der is born Steveland Hardaway Jud­kins in Saginaw, Mich. Wonder has re­corded more than 30 Top 10 hits and has received 25 Grammy awards, one of the most-awarded male solo artists, and has sold more than 100 million records worldwide, making him one of the Top 60 best-selling music artists. Wonder is also noted for his work as an activist for political causes, including his 1980 cam­paign to make Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday a holiday in the United States.

 

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